Objective: 1. to assess the impact of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) on the occurrence of bacteraemia in HIV-infected patients and their clinical and microbiological characteristics. 2. to identify risk factors for bacteraemia in this setting.
Methods: The files of all HIV-infected patients hospitalized for an episode of bacteraemia in a 28-bed infectious diseases unit between January 1995 and December 1998 were reviewed. Cases occurring during HAART were compared to cases occurring in patients not receiving HAART. Furthermore, in a case-control study, patients with bacteraemia occurring during HAART were compared with other patients receiving HAART.
Results: There were 74 episodes of bacteraemia in patients not receiving HAART and 31 episodes in patients receiving HAART. The occurrence of bacteraemia fell from 10.5/100 hospitalizations in 1995 to 5.5/100 in 1998 (P = 0.02 trend test). The occurence of P. aeruginosa bacteraemia fell sharply (9/398 vs 1/273, P = 0.05). A significant fall in catheter-related infections was observed between 1995 and 1998 (5.5% vs 1.8%). The two-thirds/one-third distribution of hospital-acquired and community-acquired infections remained stable throughout the period study. In patients receiving HAART, the case-control study showed by multivariate analysis, that a CD4 cell count of less than 100/ micro L [OR = 7.3 (1.9-49.7)], and the use of exogenous devices [OR = 13.3 (2.5-71)] were significantly associated with the risk of bacteraemia.
Conclusion: The introduction of HAART has been associated with a significant fall in the occurrence of bacteraemia. However, patients with a low CD4 cell count remain at risk of bacteraemia with similar microbiological and epidemiological characteristics than in the pre-HAART era.